Actually, Boxcarbill, he was disbarred in the 80's, and reinstated in '96. He is a member of the bar. I had his report faxed to me.
He mailed the petition to me.
He pulled the wrong form when drafting the petition, however. It was the form for "Attorney for Respondents". I pointed this out to him (by phone) before I filed it. I replaced the phrase with "Petitioner". His signature, name, State Bar number, mailing address, phone numbers and email address appear on the line under "Respectfully Submitted".
The clerk noted this, and filed it.
The Discovery Level section may interest you.
It states,
"Discovery in this case is intended to be conducted under level 1 of rule 190 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. This is an uncontested divorce and Petitioner believes the parties will [another hand edit I had to make - "agree"] to a division of the community property. It is anticipated the case will be submitted on an Agreed Statement of Facts."
At any rate, other issues have arisen. I rather expect that this will not proceed smoothly as uncontested for various reasons, the most interesting one being that I am reasonably sure that I did not sign the Note for the home. The bank has verified that my wife is the sole borrower on the loan. I am on the deed, however. I really don't know how these facts figure into the mix. Neither of us can afford the home by ourselves. I certainly don't have any interest in keeping it, nor want any claim to any portion of it. When she mentioned the possibility of foreclosure, I initially balked. Later, the reality started sinking in and I told her that the idea is looking more attractive every day (it's a buyer's market here...it's not going to sell any time soon). She is being advised, obviously...she told me that I could sign a quit-claim deed and pay her for half of the estimated upside-down on the house were it to be foreclosed on, and that she would discount the selling price by that amount and sell it...and continue with an uncontested divorce. Which, of course, she could reneg on at the drop of a hat.
Sounds raw to me, but what do I know? I have not responded to that, yet. I don't even know if I can legally just move out and stop paying for my half of the mortgage. Currently, I reside there and maintain the place.
At the moment, I have this lawyer's activities on hold. He has not contacted her nor sent her a copy of the petition.
Tomorrow I will receive a copy of the Note on the home, and will know with certainty whether or not I signed it.
Boxcarbill...if I did not sign that Note, am I obliged to continue paying the mortgage payments? Lawyer says, "absolutely not".
If not...and I do stop paying, is that likely to affect me adversely?
Many thanks,
Shep